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Hickory Woods Neighborhood, Buffalo, New York
Toxic Waste Threatens a Housing Subdivision Built in a Brownfield
The City of Buffalo built a housing development on an old steel
manufacturing site without thoroughly assessing or remediating the site. The residents of
Hickory Woods are now finding high levels of toxic chemicals in their community. The state
Department of Health warns that several of the neighborhood lots pose a health risk.
Residents are demanding complete health studies, relocation and financial compensation for
their lost property values.
In the late 1980s, the City of Buffalo, New York, purchased and began to
redevelop part of an old LTV Steel site in south Buffalo. Using federal and state funds,
the City created a development of approximately 60 homes on the property, which is
adjacent to a state Superfund site hidden from view by a City-built berm. Redeveloping the
area helped people become homeowners and generated new tax revenues for the city. But with
the belated discovery of soil contaminated with carcinogenic polynuclear aromatic
hydrocarbons and other wastes, some residents of the Hickory Woods neighborhood were
temporarily relocated, and many others concerned about possible health risks want to be
relocated at least until the site is fully evaluated and cleaned up.
The City never told prospective homebuyers about the neighborhood's environmental
contamination. The City itself may not have known about the contamination because it never
thoroughly assessed environmental risks when it redeveloped the property. Although
construction of some homes began in 1988, no environmental assessment of the site ever
took place until 1993 -- and that was a limited investigation of only some properties.
After that, the City, without notifying residents, conducted a limited cleanup of 13 lots.
In 1995, the City contracted with a consulting firm for another "Limited
Environmental Investigation."
These partial investigations were clearly inadequate because in 1998, when developers were
building a basement for a new home, they discovered cindery black coke wastes, refractory
bricks and an oozing black substance in the soil. Development ceased, and in the course of
sampling, the City found extremely high levels of polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons (some
over 100,000 parts per million), carcinogens associated with steel manufacturing. Sampling
on three adjacent, occupied properties also showed levels of polynuclear aromatic
hydrocarbons that exceeded action levels for EPA emergency response.
Subsequently the City conducted some additional sampling in the neighborhood while also
excavating soil on the four most contaminated lots -- all without any approval of state
environmental agencies or input from residents. The cleanup effort also uncovered a
benzene-contaminated leaking underground storage tank, and the City has speculated that
there may be more tanks in the neighborhood. Excavated material from the cleanup now sits
across the street, uncovered. In addition to their other potential exposures, residents
are concerned that this contaminated soil, blown by winds throughout the neighborhood, is
creating other health risks.
Based on the still-scanty sampling conducted so far, the state Department of Health warned
residents not to dig below four-to-six inches in their yards unless remediation occurs.
This warning comes too late for most residents, who have planted trees and gardens or
built decks or fences. The Department has said that several neighborhood lots "have
posed and continue to pose a health risk for children and adults living next to the
properties."
In December 1999, in response to requests from the Hickory Woods Concerned Homeowners
Association, the Buffalo Common Council passed a resolution calling for relocation of
citizens who would like to leave, comprehensive remediation of the site, financial
assistance to residents who have suffered economic losses, and comprehensive testing to
address residents' health concerns. The City has filed notice to sue LTV to recover
$800,000 in cleanup funds it spent. The City has also requested the state Department of
Health to conduct a health study. U.S. EPA is planning to sample for contamination in the
area this spring.
The residents' concerns about health risks and plummeting property values at Hickory Woods
remain unresolved. Many residents report various forms of cancer, respiratory ailments and
birth defects, which they attribute to the neighborhood's contamination and its proximity
to the state Superfund site. But some of the lessons from Hickory Woods are clear. The
City should not have redeveloped a heavy industrial site into a residential neighborhood
without first conducting a thorough environmental assessment of the site. The City should
have fully informed and involved the residents in decisions about their neighborhood. And
state agencies should have exercised more vigorous oversight of this redevelopment to
ensure protection of public health.
Judy Robinson of Citizens Environmental Coalition in Buffalo supplied much of the
information for this overview of the pollution problems in Hickory Woods.
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